Previously, the British Association
of University Teachers (AUT) had established an academic boycott of Israel,
which Boycott Watch had reported as a
book-burning since, by definition, also barred ideas of
Israeli educators. The boycott was later rescinded after much debate.

Today,
IMRA, the Israel-based
Independent Media Review and Analysis organization,
reports a merger of British teachers unions which may force
the AUT, which has rejected the academic boycott, to join into a larger boycott
of Israel and the ideas of academics even though it is against it.

If this occurs, we will once again see a national
academic book burning reminiscent of
Kristallnacht, the night the Nazis broke the windows of
Jewish stores and burned books. An Academic boycott is the denial of all ideas
from people one does not agree with, regardless of what those ideas are. In a
sense, it is saying that nothing Israeli academics say, even if saving lives,
it good. This can only be summed up as anti-Semitism - pure and simple. It is
hate. It is racism.

The British Parliament should be
ashamed of the National Association of Teachers in Higher Education (NATFHE)
which may absorb the AUT, and the British Labour party should demand its
immediate disbanding.

In a world where Iran is
preparing to wage war against the entire western world including Christians and
Jews within their own borders, seeing Britain's supposed intellectuals join in
the world of hate is appalling, dangerous and downright scary.

While Boycott Watch usually reports both sides so
people can decide for themselves what the truth is, this boycott is so
disturbing that giving the NATFHE a platform to spew hate is not something we
find unacceptable since there is no excuse for anti-Semitism.

Sunday,
May 21, 2006 Anthony Julius Tells University of Haifa Audience of New
Boycott Attempt

Anthony Julius Tells University
of Haifa Audience of New Boycott Attempt HAIFA. May 21(University of
Haifa)-Anthony Julius, the British litigator, is once again defending Israeli
academic institutions. Speaking today at the opening session of the University
of Haifa's Board of Governors Meeting, Julius revealed that he was representing
an American professor at Oxford who is against the boycott that his union, the
Association of University Teachers (AUT), may be forced to accept without
debate when it merges on May 30th with the National Association of Teachers in
Higher Education (NATFHE).

The latter is expected to
pass a resolution at the end of the week (May 27) calling for the boycott of
all Israeli Universities, not just specific institutions. The 60,000-member
NATFHE is a larger union, but mainly represents teachers less prestigious
colleges, according to Julius.

"What happens if the
resolution passes?" Julius "Does it bind the new union?"

"This," he continued, "is the pressing legal question
now being debated in England."

Julius, who
successfully defended Deborah Lipstadt against Holocaust denier David Irving,
last helped overturn the AUT boycott against the University of Haifa and the
Hebrew University.

The University of Haifa is
conferring an honorary doctorate on Julius this evening.

Describing boycotts as "the weapon of choice" in
assaults against Israel, the litigator said that he expected to be the first
"correspondent" of the new union. His client will introduce a motion declaring
the NATFHE motion illegal and without validity if it is passed and appears to
be binding on the joint union.

AUT officials told him
that there is nothing they can do at this point, since they cannot interfere in
the affairs of another union. Julius thought the response disingenuous. He said
the union had an obligation to safeguard its members, but was doing nothing
about the new boycott attempt.

"It is not clear
whether the resolution will be binding," he admitted. If it is, then his client
is not being an opportunity to speak out against it and his dues will be used
to finance speakers promoting the boycott.

He related
that the new motion invites members to "consult their consciences" in regard to
a boycott, rather than mandating it outright as did the AUT resolution last
year. The present move, he said, is more sophisticated and harder to beat down.
Julius thought that boycott issue was finally gaining the attention of Israel's
friends unlike the situation several years.